| 1 | ## compare_shells: bash mksh zsh
|
| 2 | ## oils_failures_allowed: 0
|
| 3 |
|
| 4 | #### no expansion
|
| 5 | echo {foo}
|
| 6 | ## stdout: {foo}
|
| 7 |
|
| 8 | #### incomplete trailing expansion
|
| 9 | echo {a,b}_{
|
| 10 | ## stdout: a_{ b_{
|
| 11 | ## OK osh stdout: {a,b}_{
|
| 12 |
|
| 13 | #### partial leading expansion
|
| 14 | echo }_{a,b}
|
| 15 | ## stdout: }_a }_b
|
| 16 | ## OK osh stdout: }_{a,b}
|
| 17 |
|
| 18 | #### partial leading expansion 2
|
| 19 | echo {x}_{a,b}
|
| 20 | ## stdout: {x}_a {x}_b
|
| 21 | ## OK osh stdout: {x}_{a,b}
|
| 22 |
|
| 23 | #### } in expansion
|
| 24 | # hm they treat this the SAME. Leftmost { is matched by first }, and then
|
| 25 | # there is another } as the postfix.
|
| 26 | echo {a,b}}
|
| 27 | ## stdout: a} b}
|
| 28 | ## status: 0
|
| 29 | ## OK osh stdout: {a,b}}
|
| 30 | ## OK zsh stdout-json: ""
|
| 31 | ## OK zsh status: 1
|
| 32 |
|
| 33 | #### single expansion
|
| 34 | echo {foo,bar}
|
| 35 | ## stdout: foo bar
|
| 36 |
|
| 37 | #### double expansion
|
| 38 | echo {a,b}_{c,d}
|
| 39 | ## stdout: a_c a_d b_c b_d
|
| 40 |
|
| 41 | #### triple expansion
|
| 42 | echo {0,1}{0,1}{0,1}
|
| 43 | ## stdout: 000 001 010 011 100 101 110 111
|
| 44 |
|
| 45 | #### double expansion with single and double quotes
|
| 46 | echo {'a',b}_{c,"d"}
|
| 47 | ## stdout: a_c a_d b_c b_d
|
| 48 |
|
| 49 | #### expansion with mixed quotes
|
| 50 | echo -{\X"b",'cd'}-
|
| 51 | ## stdout: -Xb- -cd-
|
| 52 |
|
| 53 | #### expansion with simple var
|
| 54 | a=A
|
| 55 | echo -{$a,b}-
|
| 56 | ## stdout: -A- -b-
|
| 57 |
|
| 58 | #### double expansion with simple var -- bash bug
|
| 59 | # bash is inconsistent with the above
|
| 60 | a=A
|
| 61 | echo {$a,b}_{c,d}
|
| 62 | ## stdout: A_c A_d b_c b_d
|
| 63 | ## BUG bash stdout: b_c b_d
|
| 64 |
|
| 65 | #### double expansion with braced variable
|
| 66 | # This fixes it
|
| 67 | a=A
|
| 68 | echo {${a},b}_{c,d}
|
| 69 | ## stdout: A_c A_d b_c b_d
|
| 70 |
|
| 71 | #### double expansion with literal and simple var
|
| 72 | a=A
|
| 73 | echo {_$a,b}_{c,d}
|
| 74 | ## stdout: _A_c _A_d b_c b_d
|
| 75 | ## BUG bash stdout: _ _ b_c b_d
|
| 76 |
|
| 77 | #### expansion with command sub
|
| 78 | a=A
|
| 79 | echo -{$(echo a),b}-
|
| 80 | ## stdout: -a- -b-
|
| 81 |
|
| 82 | #### expansion with arith sub
|
| 83 | a=A
|
| 84 | echo -{$((1 + 2)),b}-
|
| 85 | ## stdout: -3- -b-
|
| 86 |
|
| 87 | #### double expansion with escaped literals
|
| 88 | a=A
|
| 89 | echo -{\$,\[,\]}-
|
| 90 | ## stdout: -$- -[- -]-
|
| 91 |
|
| 92 | #### { in expansion
|
| 93 | # bash and mksh treat this differently. bash treats the
|
| 94 | # first { is a prefix. I think it's harder to read, and \{{a,b} should be
|
| 95 | # required.
|
| 96 | echo {{a,b}
|
| 97 | ## stdout: {{a,b}
|
| 98 | ## BUG bash/zsh stdout: {a {b
|
| 99 |
|
| 100 | #### quoted { in expansion
|
| 101 | echo \{{a,b}
|
| 102 | ## stdout: {a {b
|
| 103 |
|
| 104 | #### Empty expansion
|
| 105 | echo a{X,,Y}b
|
| 106 | ## stdout: aXb ab aYb
|
| 107 |
|
| 108 | #### Empty alternative
|
| 109 | # zsh and mksh don't do word elision, probably because they do brace expansion
|
| 110 | # AFTER variable substitution.
|
| 111 | argv.py {X,,Y,}
|
| 112 | ## stdout: ['X', 'Y']
|
| 113 | ## OK mksh/zsh stdout: ['X', '', 'Y', '']
|
| 114 | ## status: 0
|
| 115 |
|
| 116 | #### Empty alternative with empty string suffix
|
| 117 | # zsh and mksh don't do word elision, probably because they do brace expansion
|
| 118 | # AFTER variable substitution.
|
| 119 | argv.py {X,,Y,}''
|
| 120 | ## stdout: ['X', '', 'Y', '']
|
| 121 | ## status: 0
|
| 122 |
|
| 123 | #### nested brace expansion
|
| 124 | echo -{A,={a,b}=,B}-
|
| 125 | ## stdout: -A- -=a=- -=b=- -B-
|
| 126 |
|
| 127 | #### triple nested brace expansion
|
| 128 | echo -{A,={a,.{x,y}.,b}=,B}-
|
| 129 | ## stdout: -A- -=a=- -=.x.=- -=.y.=- -=b=- -B-
|
| 130 |
|
| 131 | #### nested and double brace expansion
|
| 132 | echo -{A,={a,b}{c,d}=,B}-
|
| 133 | ## stdout: -A- -=ac=- -=ad=- -=bc=- -=bd=- -B-
|
| 134 |
|
| 135 | #### expansion on RHS of assignment
|
| 136 | # I think bash's behavior is more consistent. No splitting either.
|
| 137 | v={X,Y}
|
| 138 | echo $v
|
| 139 | ## stdout: {X,Y}
|
| 140 | ## BUG mksh stdout: X Y
|
| 141 |
|
| 142 | #### no expansion with RHS assignment
|
| 143 | {v,x}=X
|
| 144 | ## status: 127
|
| 145 | ## stdout-json: ""
|
| 146 | ## OK zsh status: 1
|
| 147 |
|
| 148 | #### Tilde expansion
|
| 149 | HOME=/home/foo
|
| 150 | echo ~
|
| 151 | HOME=/home/bar
|
| 152 | echo ~
|
| 153 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 154 | /home/foo
|
| 155 | /home/bar
|
| 156 | ## END
|
| 157 |
|
| 158 | #### Tilde expansion with brace expansion
|
| 159 |
|
| 160 | # The brace expansion happens FIRST. After that, the second token has tilde
|
| 161 | # FIRST, so it gets expanded. The first token has an unexpanded tilde, because
|
| 162 | # it's not in the leading position.
|
| 163 |
|
| 164 | HOME=/home/bob
|
| 165 |
|
| 166 | # Command
|
| 167 |
|
| 168 | echo {foo~,~}/bar
|
| 169 |
|
| 170 | # Loop
|
| 171 |
|
| 172 | for x in {foo~,~}/bar; do
|
| 173 | echo -- $x
|
| 174 | done
|
| 175 |
|
| 176 | # Array
|
| 177 |
|
| 178 | a=({foo~,~}/bar)
|
| 179 |
|
| 180 | for y in "${a[@]}"; do
|
| 181 | echo "== $y"
|
| 182 | done
|
| 183 |
|
| 184 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 185 | foo~/bar /home/bob/bar
|
| 186 | -- foo~/bar
|
| 187 | -- /home/bob/bar
|
| 188 | == foo~/bar
|
| 189 | == /home/bob/bar
|
| 190 | ## END
|
| 191 |
|
| 192 | ## BUG mksh STDOUT:
|
| 193 | foo~/bar ~/bar
|
| 194 | -- foo~/bar
|
| 195 | -- ~/bar
|
| 196 | == foo~/bar
|
| 197 | == ~/bar
|
| 198 | ## END
|
| 199 |
|
| 200 | #### Two kinds of tilde expansion
|
| 201 |
|
| 202 | HOME=/home/bob
|
| 203 |
|
| 204 | # Command
|
| 205 | echo ~{/src,root}
|
| 206 |
|
| 207 | # Loop
|
| 208 |
|
| 209 | for x in ~{/src,root}; do
|
| 210 | echo -- $x
|
| 211 | done
|
| 212 |
|
| 213 | # Array
|
| 214 |
|
| 215 | a=(~{/src,root})
|
| 216 |
|
| 217 | for y in "${a[@]}"; do
|
| 218 | echo "== $y"
|
| 219 | done
|
| 220 |
|
| 221 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 222 | /home/bob/src /root
|
| 223 | -- /home/bob/src
|
| 224 | -- /root
|
| 225 | == /home/bob/src
|
| 226 | == /root
|
| 227 | ## END
|
| 228 |
|
| 229 | ## BUG mksh STDOUT:
|
| 230 | ~/src ~root
|
| 231 | -- ~/src
|
| 232 | -- ~root
|
| 233 | == ~/src
|
| 234 | == ~root
|
| 235 | ## END
|
| 236 |
|
| 237 | #### Tilde expansion come before var expansion
|
| 238 | HOME=/home/bob
|
| 239 | foo=~
|
| 240 | echo $foo
|
| 241 | foo='~'
|
| 242 | echo $foo
|
| 243 | # In the second instance, we expand into a literal ~, and since var expansion
|
| 244 | # comes after tilde expansion, it is NOT tried again.
|
| 245 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 246 | /home/bob
|
| 247 | ~
|
| 248 | ## END
|
| 249 |
|
| 250 | #### Number range expansion
|
| 251 | echo -{1..8..3}-
|
| 252 | echo -{1..10..3}-
|
| 253 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 254 | -1- -4- -7-
|
| 255 | -1- -4- -7- -10-
|
| 256 | ## N-I mksh STDOUT:
|
| 257 | -{1..8..3}-
|
| 258 | -{1..10..3}-
|
| 259 | ## END
|
| 260 |
|
| 261 | #### Ascending number range expansion with negative step is invalid
|
| 262 | echo -{1..8..-3}-
|
| 263 | ## stdout-json: ""
|
| 264 | ## status: 2
|
| 265 | ## BUG bash stdout: -1- -4- -7-
|
| 266 | ## BUG zsh stdout: -7- -4- -1-
|
| 267 | ## BUG bash/zsh status: 0
|
| 268 | ## N-I mksh stdout: -{1..8..-3}-
|
| 269 | ## N-I mksh status: 0
|
| 270 |
|
| 271 | #### regression: -1 step disallowed
|
| 272 | echo -{1..4..-1}-
|
| 273 | ## stdout-json: ""
|
| 274 | ## status: 2
|
| 275 | ## BUG bash stdout: -1- -2- -3- -4-
|
| 276 | ## BUG zsh stdout: -4- -3- -2- -1-
|
| 277 | ## BUG bash/zsh status: 0
|
| 278 | ## N-I mksh stdout: -{1..4..-1}-
|
| 279 | ## N-I mksh status: 0
|
| 280 |
|
| 281 | #### regression: 0 step disallowed
|
| 282 | echo -{1..4..0}-
|
| 283 | ## stdout-json: ""
|
| 284 | ## status: 2
|
| 285 | ## BUG bash stdout: -1- -2- -3- -4-
|
| 286 | ## BUG zsh stdout: -1..4..0-
|
| 287 | ## BUG bash/zsh status: 0
|
| 288 | ## N-I mksh stdout: -{1..4..0}-
|
| 289 | ## N-I mksh status: 0
|
| 290 |
|
| 291 | #### Descending number range expansion with positive step is invalid
|
| 292 | echo -{8..1..3}-
|
| 293 | ## stdout-json: ""
|
| 294 | ## status: 2
|
| 295 | ## BUG bash/zsh stdout: -8- -5- -2-
|
| 296 | ## BUG bash/zsh status: 0
|
| 297 | ## N-I mksh stdout: -{8..1..3}-
|
| 298 | ## N-I mksh status: 0
|
| 299 |
|
| 300 | #### Descending number range expansion with negative step
|
| 301 | echo -{8..1..-3}-
|
| 302 | ## stdout: -8- -5- -2-
|
| 303 | # zsh behavior seems clearly wrong!
|
| 304 | ## BUG zsh stdout: -2- -5- -8-
|
| 305 | ## N-I mksh stdout: -{8..1..-3}-
|
| 306 |
|
| 307 | #### Singleton ranges
|
| 308 | echo {1..1}-
|
| 309 | echo {-9..-9}-
|
| 310 | echo {-9..-9..3}-
|
| 311 | echo {-9..-9..-3}-
|
| 312 | echo {a..a}-
|
| 313 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 314 | 1-
|
| 315 | -9-
|
| 316 | -9-
|
| 317 | -9-
|
| 318 | a-
|
| 319 | ## END
|
| 320 | ## N-I mksh STDOUT:
|
| 321 | {1..1}-
|
| 322 | {-9..-9}-
|
| 323 | {-9..-9..3}-
|
| 324 | {-9..-9..-3}-
|
| 325 | {a..a}-
|
| 326 | ## END
|
| 327 |
|
| 328 | #### Singleton char ranges with steps
|
| 329 | echo {a..a..2}-
|
| 330 | echo {a..a..-2}-
|
| 331 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 332 | a-
|
| 333 | a-
|
| 334 | ## END
|
| 335 | # zsh is considered buggy because it implements {a..a} but not {a..a..1} !
|
| 336 | ## BUG zsh STDOUT:
|
| 337 | {a..a..2}-
|
| 338 | {a..a..-2}-
|
| 339 | ## END
|
| 340 | ## N-I mksh STDOUT:
|
| 341 | {a..a..2}-
|
| 342 | {a..a..-2}-
|
| 343 | ## END
|
| 344 |
|
| 345 | #### Char range expansion
|
| 346 | echo -{a..e}-
|
| 347 | ## stdout: -a- -b- -c- -d- -e-
|
| 348 | ## N-I mksh stdout: -{a..e}-
|
| 349 |
|
| 350 | #### Char range expansion with step
|
| 351 | echo -{a..e..2}-
|
| 352 | ## stdout: -a- -c- -e-
|
| 353 | ## N-I mksh/zsh stdout: -{a..e..2}-
|
| 354 |
|
| 355 | #### Char ranges with steps of the wrong sign
|
| 356 | echo -{a..e..-2}-
|
| 357 | echo -{e..a..2}-
|
| 358 | ## stdout-json: ""
|
| 359 | ## status: 2
|
| 360 | ## BUG bash STDOUT:
|
| 361 | -a- -c- -e-
|
| 362 | -e- -c- -a-
|
| 363 | ## END
|
| 364 | ## BUG bash status: 0
|
| 365 | ## N-I mksh/zsh STDOUT:
|
| 366 | -{a..e..-2}-
|
| 367 | -{e..a..2}-
|
| 368 | ## END
|
| 369 | ## BUG mksh/zsh status: 0
|
| 370 |
|
| 371 | #### Mixed case char expansion is invalid
|
| 372 | case $SH in *zsh) echo BUG; exit ;; esac
|
| 373 | echo -{z..A}-
|
| 374 | echo -{z..A..2}-
|
| 375 | ## stdout-json: ""
|
| 376 | ## status: 2
|
| 377 | ## OK mksh STDOUT:
|
| 378 | -{z..A}-
|
| 379 | -{z..A..2}-
|
| 380 | ## END
|
| 381 | ## OK mksh status: 0
|
| 382 | ## BUG zsh stdout: BUG
|
| 383 | ## BUG zsh status: 0
|
| 384 | # This is exposed a weird bash bug!!!
|
| 385 | ## BUG bash stdout-json: ""
|
| 386 | ## BUG bash status: 1
|
| 387 |
|
| 388 | #### Descending char range expansion
|
| 389 | echo -{e..a..-2}-
|
| 390 | ## stdout: -e- -c- -a-
|
| 391 | ## N-I mksh/zsh stdout: -{e..a..-2}-
|
| 392 |
|
| 393 | #### Fixed width number range expansion
|
| 394 | echo -{01..03}-
|
| 395 | echo -{09..12}- # doesn't become -012-, fixed width
|
| 396 | echo -{12..07}-
|
| 397 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 398 | -01- -02- -03-
|
| 399 | -09- -10- -11- -12-
|
| 400 | -12- -11- -10- -09- -08- -07-
|
| 401 | ## END
|
| 402 | ## N-I mksh STDOUT:
|
| 403 | -{01..03}-
|
| 404 | -{09..12}-
|
| 405 | -{12..07}-
|
| 406 | ## END
|
| 407 |
|
| 408 | #### Inconsistent fixed width number range expansion
|
| 409 | # zsh uses the first one, bash uses the max width?
|
| 410 | echo -{01..003}-
|
| 411 | ## stdout: -001- -002- -003-
|
| 412 | ## OK zsh stdout: -01- -02- -03-
|
| 413 | ## N-I mksh stdout: -{01..003}-
|
| 414 |
|
| 415 | #### Inconsistent fixed width number range expansion
|
| 416 | # zsh uses the first width, bash uses the max width?
|
| 417 | echo -{01..3}-
|
| 418 | ## stdout: -01- -02- -03-
|
| 419 | ## N-I mksh stdout: -{01..3}-
|
| 420 |
|
| 421 | #### Adjacent comma and range works
|
| 422 | echo -{a,b}{1..3}-
|
| 423 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 424 | -a1- -a2- -a3- -b1- -b2- -b3-
|
| 425 | ## END
|
| 426 | ## N-I mksh STDOUT:
|
| 427 | -a{1..3}- -b{1..3}-
|
| 428 | ## END
|
| 429 |
|
| 430 | #### Range inside comma works
|
| 431 | echo -{a,_{1..3}_,b}-
|
| 432 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 433 | -a- -_1_- -_2_- -_3_- -b-
|
| 434 | ## END
|
| 435 | ## N-I mksh STDOUT:
|
| 436 | -a- -_{1..3}_- -b-
|
| 437 | ## END
|
| 438 |
|
| 439 | #### Mixed comma and range doesn't work
|
| 440 | echo -{a,b,1..3}-
|
| 441 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 442 | -a- -b- -1..3-
|
| 443 | ## END
|
| 444 |
|
| 445 | #### comma and invalid range (adjacent and nested)
|
| 446 | echo -{a,b}{1...3}-
|
| 447 | echo -{a,{1...3}}-
|
| 448 | echo {a,b}{}
|
| 449 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 450 | -a{1...3}- -b{1...3}-
|
| 451 | -a- -{1...3}-
|
| 452 | a{} b{}
|
| 453 | ## END
|
| 454 | # osh doesn't expand ANYTHING on invalid syntax. That's OK because of the test
|
| 455 | # case below.
|
| 456 | ## OK osh STDOUT:
|
| 457 | -{a,b}{1...3}-
|
| 458 | -{a,{1...3}}-
|
| 459 | {a,b}{}
|
| 460 | ## END
|
| 461 |
|
| 462 | #### OSH provides an alternative to invalid syntax
|
| 463 | echo -{a,b}\{1...3\}-
|
| 464 | echo -{a,\{1...3\}}-
|
| 465 | echo {a,b}\{\}
|
| 466 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 467 | -a{1...3}- -b{1...3}-
|
| 468 | -a- -{1...3}-
|
| 469 | a{} b{}
|
| 470 | ## END
|
| 471 |
|
| 472 | #### Side effect in expansion
|
| 473 | # bash is the only one that does it first. I guess since this is
|
| 474 | # non-POSIX anyway, follow bash?
|
| 475 | i=0
|
| 476 | echo {a,b,c}-$((i++))
|
| 477 | ## stdout: a-0 b-1 c-2
|
| 478 | ## OK mksh/zsh stdout: a-0 b-0 c-0
|
| 479 |
|
| 480 | #### Invalid brace expansions don't expand
|
| 481 | echo {1.3}
|
| 482 | echo {1...3}
|
| 483 | echo {1__3}
|
| 484 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 485 | {1.3}
|
| 486 | {1...3}
|
| 487 | {1__3}
|
| 488 | ## END
|
| 489 |
|
| 490 | #### Invalid brace expansions mixing characters and numbers
|
| 491 | # zsh does something crazy like : ; < = > that I'm not writing
|
| 492 | case $SH in *zsh) echo BUG; exit ;; esac
|
| 493 | echo {1..a}
|
| 494 | echo {z..3}
|
| 495 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 496 | {1..a}
|
| 497 | {z..3}
|
| 498 | ## END
|
| 499 | ## BUG zsh STDOUT:
|
| 500 | BUG
|
| 501 | ## END
|
| 502 |
|